This certified true copy of Mary
McPherson's two-page affidavit (scanned documents below) was provided by the Commissioner of Affidavits of the
Town of Bracebridge, Ontario. Mary McPherson's affidavit is the only
verifiable, legal evidence of Rene Caisse's Essiac formula.

This evidence will hold up in a court
of law because it is the only official evidence, under Oath, recorded for the
public record in a government office, which gives the original, authentic Essiac formula. Mary McPherson knew the Essiac formula because
she was the only person (other than Rene herself) who was allowed to make Essiac
tea to give to Rene's cancer patients. This is the formula which helped so
many cancer patients in Rene Caisse's clinic in Bracebridge, Ontario. It
is true that Rene Caisse did experiment with various herb combinations
throughout her life, but the affidavit below reveals the final formula that she settled on after many years of experimentation with real cancer patients
and laboratory mice. Anyone can obtain a certified copy of this affidavit
from the Town of Bracebridge, Ontario, as I have done. Regardless of what
some websites claim, this document reveals that the "Essiac" formula and
recipe was officially placed in the public domain for everyone's use on December
23, 1994. Mary McPherson's affidavit was also verified by Sheila Snow and Mali Klein in
their book
ESSIAC--THE SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE'S HERBAL PHARMACY (p. 14) and can be seen
in the appendix of Mali Klein's book
THE ESSIAC BOOK.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Notice that the "1 ounce of herb mixture" is not a
weight measurement because it is measured with "a measuring cup" that
measures fluid ounces, which is a volume measurement of water. It is important to mention
that Rene Caisse did not use a weight measurement when adding the herb mixture
to boiling water. She used volume
measurement for the combined dried herbs with fluid ounce measurements.
This makes the recipe seem confusing unless one realizes that one cup of the
dried herb mixture does not weigh as much as one cup of water (which weighs 8
ounces). That is, one cup of "herb mixture" does not weigh 8 fluid ounces
because the dried, powdered herbs are lighter than water.

Rene Caisse did weigh the
individual herbs before mixing them together. That is, the "1 pound of
sheep sorrel herbs", "1/4 pound of slippery elm bark" and "1 ounce of Turkish
rhubarb root" are weight measurements. 6 1/2 cups of cut burdock root is,
of course, a volume measurement and it is approximately equivalent to 24 ounces
in weight when pieces are "the size of small peas". [SECRETS
OF RENE CAISSE'S PHARMACY, p. 14]

It is also important to
note that Rene Caisse used the whole sheep sorrel plant. Nurse Caisse
stated thatsheep sorrel roots are "very
essential" to the Essiac formula.

CLICK HEREto view a copy of the Essiac formula that Mary
McPherson gave to Barbara Kokotsis in the early 1980s.

CLICK HEREfor the
December 2012 interview with Barbara Kokotsis wherein she verifies
sheep sorrel roots in the Essiac
formula that Mary McPherson gave her in the early 1980s.

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